Yup. I think it's interesting though that so many economic forecasts have been revised up for the UK since the referendum. Historically too, the UK's always been a pretty powerful economy, so I think that, worst case scenario, we'll look back in 20 or 30 years and say "well if we'd stayed in, we'd have grown X% faster per annum", rather than "getting out has tanked our economy to 1950s levels" or whatever (I know, hyperbole, but you get the idea I'm sure
).
The economic numbers are looking better, true, but...
1. Unemployment in many places is still god-awful, especially for the young.
2. It'd be interesting to see a breakdown of the numbers - I suspect a lot of the growth would be due to (a) Germany, and (b) financial services and related stuff.
3. Immigration.
Number 2 I think is economically bearable if you have enough big wealth transfers - ie you tax the bankers and Germans to pay unemployed Italian factory workers benefits. Socially it's corrosive as hell, but that's a longer-term problem.
Number 1 is also a longer term problem, because those young people wouldn't get many high-paying jobs anyway, so their immediate economic contribution is minimal. Again, you get long-term social issues from it. Young men with no job prospects and nothing to do = hope you like crime & riots!
Number 3 is what will destroy the EU. The EU leadership seems incapable of (a) stopping, and (b) reversing, the flow of immigrants, and you need to do both if you want the EU to survive. Otherwise the nationalists will seize power, get out, and start deporting people. And if they fail, the ultra-nationalists will seize power, get out, and start
killing people, and I doubt anyone here wants that. Either way, the EU will crumble.
(As an aside, I should point out that a non-Euro Greece for example would almost certainly survived the financial crisis better, because it could have massively devalued the drachma etc. This isn't the same as being out of the EU as a whole, but it's worth pointing out nonetheless.)